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multiple adverse experiences and child cognitive development PDF

289 Pages·2015·3.23 MB·English
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MULTIPLE ADVERSE EXPERIENCES AND CHILD COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT by Stephanie Guinosso A dissertation submitted to Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Baltimore, Maryland September, 2015 © 2015 Stephanie Guinosso All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT Background Children exposed to multiple adversities in their social environment are more likely to have poorer cognitive outcomes. This dissertation examined the relations between multiple adverse experiences in childhood and cognitive development with a particular emphasis on the type of adversity, timing of exposure, and underlying mechanisms. Methods For Aim 1, a guiding conceptual framework describing the relationship between multiple adverse experiences and child cognitive development was developed through a systematic review of the literature. For Aim 2, the relations between multiple adverse experiences and measures of child verbal ability, attention and working memory, including the effects of different domains (or types) of adverse experiences as well as the timing of exposure, were examined using a longitudinal cohort of 2976 children followed from birth to nine years. Using this same cohort, Aim 3 examined whether characteristics of the home environment mediated the effect of different domains of adverse experiences on these cognitive outcomes and whether gender moderated this process. Results The conceptual framework proposed from the literature review in Aim 1 presented three domains of adverse experiences, including lack of safety, family instability and economic hardship which were all hypothesized to influence children’s ii general cognitive ability and executive function by impairing the safety, stability, nurturance and stimulation a child receives in the home environment. In Aim 2, exposure to adversity in infancy and at age three directly predicted cognitive outcomes at ages five and nine, even after controlling for concurrent adverse exposures. Furthermore, economic hardship had the most salient effects. Results from Aim 3 showed that the availability of reading materials and to a lesser extent maternal warmth at age three partially mediated the effect between economic hardship at infancy and cognitive outcomes at ages five and nine. The availability of reading materials also partially mediated the effect between lack of safety and family instability on verbal ability, for boys only. Conclusions Efforts to promote safe, stable, nurturing and stimulating home environments through early interventions are promising strategies to improve outcomes for youth. Additionally, policies that alleviate poverty and boost maternal education may positively impact future generations. iii COMMITTEE OF FINAL THESIS READERS Committee Members Dr. David Bishai, Professor Department of Population, Family & Reproductive Health (Primary) Health, Behavior and Society (Joint) International Health (Joint) Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Nicholas Ialongo, Professor Department of Mental Health Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Sara Johnson, Associate Professor and Thesis Advisor Department of Pediatrics (Primary) Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Department of Population, Family & Reproductive Health (Joint) Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Anne Riley, Professor and Thesis Advisor Department of Population, Family & Reproductive Health (Primary) Health Policy and Management (Joint) Mental Health (Joint) Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Non-Voting Members Dr. Sharon Ghazarian, Adjunct Faculty School of Nursing Johns Hopkins University Alternate Members Dr. Christina Bethell, Professor Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Elizabeth Letourneau, Associate Professor Department of Mental Health Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Erica Sibinga, Associate Professor Department of Pediatrics Johns Hopkins School of Medicine iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS “You are at my side, dear friends, and God is everywhere. Yet ultimately we are alone, making our way home by the candle of the heart. The light is steady and sure but extends only far enough to see the next step. Many times the light seems to go out. But another light, one held by a stranger or friend, a book or a song, a blackbird or a wild flower, comes close enough so that we can see our path by its light. And in time we realize that the light we have borrowed was always our own.” ~Joan Borysenko This favorite quote by Joan Borysenko so perfectly captures the challenging process of completing a dissertation. With gratitude, I wish to acknowledge the many people willing to share with me their light so that I could walk this path. To my committee members, Dr. Anne Riley, Dr. Sara Johnson, Dr. Sharon Ghazarian, Dr. David Bishai, and Dr. Nicholas Ialongo, thank you for your thoughtful review and feedback on this dissertation. To Dr. Erica Sibinga, Dr. Elizabeth LeTourneau, and Dr. Christina Bethell, thank you for your willingness to serve as alternates on my committee. To my advisors, Dr. Riley and Dr. Johnson, your commitment, patience, encouragement, mentorship, and dedication to my success over the last five years has been phenomenal. Thank you for challenging me to do my best work. You are brilliant, and I am so grateful to have learned from you both – professionally and personally. Dr. Ghazarian, your willingness to dedicate time and energy to assist me remotely with my analyses was such a gift! You were an absolute pleasure to work with on these analyses, and I can’t imagine having had to navigate the nuances of Mplus without you! Thank you. I wish to offer a special thanks to the generous Jack Kent Cooke Foundation for granting me a scholarship in the final year of my program. This scholarship was truly a blessing that enabled me work less and focus more on completing my dissertation. A v whole-hearted thank you for all that you do to support students on their path to an education. To my doctoral cohort, and especially Ali Crandall, Laura Hinson, Loral Patchen, Ashli Owen, and Samira Soleimanpour, thank you for lending a listening ear, words of encouragement, and laughs along the way. I’ve learned there are things that only fellow doctoral students can understand. We are bonded for life! To my friends and community who held a space for me to leave my home in California while I ventured to Baltimore, and who continued to hold space for me while I buried myself in my home office to finish writing my dissertation, thank you for the continued encouragement. I am so grateful to have your support. To my family, I know you often wonder what I am still doing in school, but the fact that you believe that I am somehow saving the world makes me smile. Thank you for always celebrating my successes and showing me how to stay positive. To the young men I work with in juvenile hall, you are my inspiration, and you remind me why I do this work. I only hope that one day my work will benefit your lives so that you can reach your highest potential. Finally, to my husband of four years, Pete Guinosso, you are without a doubt, the best thing in my world. Thank you for enduring a year and half of a long distance relationship, feeding me, doing the laundry, holding my hand, and keeping me focused on the important things in life. I love you. Oh, and to the animals, Zoey and Kali, thank you for tolerating my endless relationship with my computer when you would have rather been cuddling and playing fetch. vi TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ii Committee of Final Thesis Readers iv Acknowledgements v Table of Contents vii List of Tables ix List of Figures xi Chapter 1: An Introduction to Multiple Adverse Experiences and Child Cognitive 1 Development Dissertation Overview 2 Dissertation Organization 3 Specific Aims and Hypotheses 3 Background and Significance 6 Theoretical and Conceptual Frameworks 16 Conclusion 21 Chapter 2: Methods and Research design 31 Aim 1 Methods 32 Aims 2 and 3 – Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study 35 Aims 2 and 3 – Description of Study Measures 38 Aims 2 and 3 – Analytic Sample 48 Aims 2 and 3 – Missing Data Analysis 50 Aim 2 – Analyses 56 Aim 3 – Analyses 69 Strengths and Limitations of Quantitative Methods 72 Chapter 3: Multiple Adversities and Child Cognitive Development: A Conceptual 91 Framework Introduction 92 Methods 94 Results 96 Discussion 106 Chapter 4: Timing of Multiple Adverse Experiences and Child Cognitive 143 Development Introduction 144 vii Methods 151 Results 164 Discussion 173 Chapter 5: Mediators of Early Adversity Domains on Child Cognitive 203 development Introduction 204 Methods 213 Results 228 Discussion 232 Chapter 6: Conclusions and Implications for Research, Policy and Practice 251 Dissertation Aims 252 Conclusions from Dissertation Aims 252 Implications 259 Concluding Comments 265 Curriculum Vitae 271 viii LIST OF TABLES Table 2.1. Scoring Criteria for Literature Review 74 Table 2.2. Number of Studies for Each Cognitive Outcome by Study Design 75 Table 2.3. Summary of Measures 76 Table 2.4. Adversity Measures Collected at each Wave 79 Table 2.5. Original and Final Analytic Sample (Covariates and Cognitive 80 Outcomes) Table 2.6. Original and Final Analytic Sample (Adverse Experiences) 81 Table 2.7. Original and Final Analytic Sample (Mediating Variables) 82 Table 2.8. Sample Attrition 83 Table 2.9. Correlations among Individuals Adversities 84 Table 2.10. List of Adversities in each Domain 86 Table 3.1. Number of Studies for Each Cognitive Outcome by Study Design 96 Table 3.2. Number of Studies for Each Cognitive Outcome by Methodology 98 Table A3.1. Studies of Multiple Adversities and General Cognitive Ability 118 Table A3.2. Studies of Multiple Adversities and Executive Function 131 Table 4.1. Description of Key Variables 183 Table 4.2. Correlations among all Variables 184 Table 4.3. Total, Direct and Specific Indirect Effects of Cumulative Adversity 185 Indices on Cognitive Outcomes Table 4.4. Total, Direct and Specific Indirect Effects of Domains on Cognitive 186 Outcomes Table A4.1. Bivariate Relations Between Individual Adversities and Cognitive 187 Outcomes Table A4.2. Adjusted Relations Between Individual Adversities and Cognitive 189 Outcomes Table A4.3. Bivariate Relations Between Cumulative Adversities, Domains, and 191 Cognitive Outcomes Table A4.4. Adjusted Relations Between Cumulative Adversities, Domains, and 192 Cognitive Outcomes Table A4.5. Adjusted Longitudinal Relations Between Cumulative Indices and 193 Cognitive Outcomes Tables A4.6. Adjusted Longitudinal Relations Between Adversity Domains and 194 Cognitive Outcomes Table 5.1. Description of Key Variables 240 ix Table 5.2. Correlations Among All Variables 241 Table 5.3. Specific Indirect Effects of Adversity Domains in Infancy on Cognitive 242 Outcomes through Age Three Reading and Maternal Warmth x

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Children exposed to multiple adversities in their social environment are more For Aim 1, a guiding conceptual framework describing the relationship to adversity in infancy and at age three directly predicted cognitive Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health . Curriculum Vitae.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.